THE WEATHER PROBABLY SNOW TODAY it i&4Ia AjW NAME IT FOR YOST TODA Y VOL. XXXIII. No. 116 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1923 EIGHT PAGES (sdale Hea --- --- EISAT DUE HIERE THURSDAYN BUILDING TOURll SURVEY OF BUI1DING PROGRAM TO BEGIN ON FRIDAY MORNING ENTERTAINMENT FOR V I S 1 TORS PLANNED Convocation Scheduled for Thursday Morning; 11 o'clock Classes Suspended Lansing; March 9-(By A.P.)-em-- hers of both houses of the legislature will visit the University of Michigan Thursday and Friday, March 15 and 46, it was announced here today. This action followed the acceptance of both houses this week of an invi- tation from President Marion L. Bur- ton of the university to visit and in- spect the institution at the expense of a group of unnamed alumni. According to the plans of the joint house and senate committee appointed to make arrangements and set a day for the eyent, a session will probably be held here Thursday morning, after which both houses will journey to Ann Arbor, remaining there probably until Friday night. Preident Marion L. Burton will address the visiting members of the legislature next Friday morning in an assembly at the Union, which will be the most important event of the two "day visit of the legislature here. President Burton will present the at- titude of the University on the build- ing program. It is expected that this meeting- between the President and the legislators and the subsequent in- spection of old and new buildings on the campus will have an important bearing when the two houses take a final vote on University appropria- I tionts. The junket which will come here a the expense of alumni will arrive in Ann Arbor late Thursday afternoon and will not begin its inspection of the University until Friday morning. Thursday evening, after a dinner at te Union, an atletic program will he given for the visitors, in Waterman igyrnasium. Lnion Minner Concludes Program On Friday morning, after the as- sembly at the Union and the inspec- tion tour, a University Convocation will be held in Hill auditorium. The f Convocation has been authorized b-) the deans, and all classes during the eleven o'clock hour will be suspend- ed. - In the afternoon the inspection of construction work on the campus will continue. The program for the leg- islators will be concluded with a din-, ner Friday evening at the Union. Organizations to Assist The Exchange club, an association -of local business men, has volunteered Its assistance in the entertainment of I the visitors. Other city organiza- tions will be asked to cooperate, as! well as the Student council and the Women's League., The committee in charge of the pro- gram is composed of Sec. Shirley W. Smith, chairman, Dean Edward I . Kraus of the Summer session, Frank H. Robbins, assistant to the Presi-, dent, Robert Campbell, treasurer of the University, Prof. Lewis M.dGra, of the Engineering college, and Paul , vickley,assistant secretary of th University. I STATISTICIANS CONPILE j H I LIST OF P11I BETA KAPPA Dr. Oscar Mi. Voorhees and hisE Istaff have just completed the Icompilation of a national (direct- ory containing the names of more I than 60,000 members of the Phi SBeta. Kappa fraternity. This book contains the names I arranged by chapters, by geo- graphical location, and also al-I phabetically. It contains every member since the founding of the I fraternity in 1776. More than 45,000 of those listed are still alive. Copies of the directory can be secured from the national secre- tary at 145 West 55th St., New1 I York City. TURKISH REPLY TO ALLIES DELIRE Angora Government Sends Note to' Ihig Commissioners Expressing Views on Treaty SUGGEST ADDITIONAL PEACE NEGOTIATIONSj FRENCH TIGHTEN GRIP ON RUHR IN FRESH ADVA9CES RIlE INDAU H1ARBOR, ELDERFIEL OCCUPIED, TIE S MOVE ON RREINIAU, RUMORS OF BRITISH PROTEST PROVE FALSE Hit sdĀ° e Head OKAUN To Address Guild BANQUET ATTRACTS -, HUG8E GATHERING } - I ,r i I k MORE THAN 1200 GRADS ATTE: ANNUAL AFFAIR AT H10. TEL COMMODORE ND) lPoixicalre Shows IDetermjinationi iYreseiitiig~ Situation to D~eputies in Berlin, March 9-(By A.P.)-A dis-' Ipatch from Mannheim reports that the! French have occupied Rheinau Har-, bor, on the Rhine, in Lower Alsace, and are marching on Rheinau, a sub- urb of Mannheim. It is also reported that the French have occupied the railway station of Dornap, near Elberfeld. According to the Berlin newspapers all the German trade unions in the Ttuhr have refused the demand of the occupation authorities to hanl over to them a list of the trades union mem- Constantinople, March 9--(By A. P.) berships. -The Turkish government's reply to . the allied peace proposal arrived here Berlin, March 9--(Py A.P.)-Kron- from Angora this afternoon an d wa.; enbeig, 3 1-2 miles southwest of Elder- handed to the British, French and ;cFld,was taken over by the forces of Italian high commissioners. Copies occupation this morning according to will also be delivered to the American .omcaie .tere and Japanese representatives. Paris, March 9-(By A.P.)-Premier The note says there are no funda- ,oincaire today addressed the for- mental modifications proposed in the eign relations committee on the sub- political clausos of the draft treaty. ject of the Ruhr situation. The pre- Turkey, however, desires sovereignty mier went into detail with regard to. of Castelorieza (off the south coast the Ruhr railroads, the organization of Asia Minor) and a small island de- of the customs, the putting into force pendent upon Tene-dos Islands (off the of import and export licenses, the ha- west coast of Asia Minor). She also ison established between the bridge' suggests the Maritza river "Thalweig" head, the relations between the occu- (lowest point of the valley) as the pation troops and the population, and frontier of Thrace rather than the the arrangements for the delivery ofI right bank of the river. coal and coke to France. Regarding the economic clausef of 1 ns Poincaire renewed his declara- the treaty the note proposes that tions made before the Chamber of clauses 71 to 117 upon which an Deputies that France would not ac-, agreement has not been reached cept any mediation nor enter into in- bgr entdhisoindro e rafdirect conversation. I-e added, how- should be disjoined from the draft ever, that the day Germany under- and subrequently discussed. stood the situation, France would be Part four of the treaty dealing with ready to listen. communications and sanitary ques- In any case the Premier declared1 tions is accepted with slight modifi- France could not abandon the secur- cations. Part five dealing with pris- ities- and' guarantees she had been oners of war is integrally accepted. forced to take in return for a simple Apuregards a regime for foreigners promise from Germany. in Turkey the note suggests that the title of this section should read "Con- Essen, March 9-(By A. P.)-TheI vention ofsRegulation Betwen Turkey disarming and expulsion of the Secur- and the Allied Powers" and insists onI ity Police at Dortmund completes the the same prerogatives for Turkish disarmament and dissolution of the subjects in allied states as for for- police bodies throughout the Ruhr., cigners in Turkey. Only certain towns now have civic police, who are virtually mere watch- PRESBYTERIANS TO 11011) imen, SECTIONAL PARTY TONIGHT The French troops have again been withdrawn. The city was searched by A meeting for all students from the French soldiers and 270 security1 Grand Rapids or any part of Michi- police were arrested and expelled with. gan south of that city will be held at a warning not to return. the Presbyterian church tonight at 8 N Official Protest - o'clock. London March 9-(By A.P.)--It has This is the first of a series of sec- Loeen reported that the British govern tional parties to be given under the beensreormatlyeprtsheon-a auspices of the Presbyterian Young ment has formally protested on legal Peoples Society to students from the :grounts against the French occupa- state of Michigan. The state has been tion of territories between the Rhine divided into several sections and a ;bridgeheads. meeting is planned every Frdiay for' , It ishlearned authoritatively, how- one of these groups. Once a month me r uthat no formal protest has been it is planned to. hold agera as- Imade, but only verbal representationst setbly of all theso geeral through diplomatic channels, pointing s-. yt. ]{# .lise- +nr fnrnli .it Dr. William Gear Spencer Dr. William G. Spencer, president of Hillsdale college and graduate of the Sorbonne University of Paris in classical languages will give an ad- dress on "Jesus The Thinker" at the Baptist Guild banquet tonight. PROPOSE CHANGS IN CONSTITUTION Investigation Cimmittee of Sente Body Recommends Revisions to Student Council MEMBERSHIP AND ELECTIONS AFFECTED BY ALTERATIONS Following are the changes in the constitution of the Student council which -have been recommended by an investigating committee of the Senate council. They are being submitted to the campus by request of the Student council prior to its detailed discussion of them at a special meeting to be held Sunday morning. A meeting of upperclassmen is be- ing planned for next week at which time the changes will be submitted to the student body for discussion be- fore they are approved and reported back to the investigating committee. MEMBERSHIP OF THE COUNCIL The Student council shall consist of nine members to be elected from the campus at large, and three ex-of- ficio members. In the event that the president shall be elected other than from the pensonnel of the council, the council shall consist of 13 mem'bers. The ex-ofiicio members shall be the president of the Michigan Union, the, editor of The Michigan Daily, and the captain of the football team, to serve only during the year that they shall actively hold these offices. No ex- officio members shall hold any office of the council. Of the 9 elected members, 6 nem- hers are to be chosen each year, 3 of whom shall serve a one year term andl 3 a two year term. Any man on the campus shall be eligible to elec- tion.. Elections to vacancies shall be byI vote of the Student council. Nomina- tions to vacancies shall be made by the nc-mination committee in the man- ner hereinafter provided for nomina- tions. Members so elected shallserve for the balance of the term so vacat- ed. Notice of an election to fill va- cancies shall be given at the preced-R ing meeting. MANNER OF NOMINATION AND ELECTION{ The body for nomination of elec- tive members shall be composed of the three ex-officio members and the president, vice-president and the sec- retary of the council. Twice as many shall be nominatd as are to be elected. Any member of the council shall have a right to place any name or names on the list to be considered. The noinating committee shall then determine how many men (Continued on Page Two) MANY PROMINENT MEN GIVE TALKS AT DINNER Samuel McRoberts, '93L, Acts as Toastmaster; Burton, Wenley Address Meeting (Special to The Daily) New York, March 9.-More than 1200 University of Michigan alumni at- tended the annual banquet of the New York Alumni Association held here to- night at the Hotel Commodore. Presi- dent Marion L. Burton, and Prof. Rob- ert M. Wenley, of the philosophy de- partment of the University spoke. Samuel McRoberts, '93L, president of the Metropolitan Trust company, and chairman of the finance committee of Armour and company, was toastmas- ter. Some of the oher speakers of the evening included William L. Day, Jr., 'OOL, former Federal judge, the young- est Federal judge in the United States at the time of his appointment; Wil- liam Henry King, '87L, United States Senator from Utah; and George Sis- er, '15E, one of the most famous ball players of all time. Among the other distinguished guests were United States Senator Copeland, '8911. Med, Earl D. Babst, president of the American Sugar Re- fining company, William A. Starrett, of Thonpson-Starrett, construction contractors, Milton H. Freeman, '03E, assistant engineer of the New York and New Jersey Vehicular tunnel, R. L. Bigelow, '5E, president of the Bige- low State bank, Jeremiah W. Jenks, '78L, of New York University. who spoke last year in Hill auditorium, S. Wright Dunning, '60L, James D. liar- ry, vice-president of the Metropolitan Life Insurance company, and Regent Junius E. Beal, '82L. FATHER'S DAY PLANS NEAINGCOMPLETION Father's Day the present name of which has been changed from Dad's Day will be held May 12 under the di- rection of the Union. President Mar- ion L. Burton will speak at the ban- quet Saturday evening at the Union which is to mark the close of the cele- bration. While Saturday, May 12, is the day especially set for the observance of ithe fathers, a number of events will take place the preceding day planned for the occasion. The annual tug-of- war between the sophomores and freshmen will be held Friday after- noon, and that evening will be held special vaudeville at the Mimes thea- ter in honor of the fathers. The spring gamer will be held Sal- urday morning on Ferry field, while the Michigan-Illinois track meet will be held during the afte-noon. The banquet in honor of the parents will be held in the evening. Fathers may visit classes on both days. Campus guides will be furnished for the guests at any time Friday.} The committee to have charge of arrangements for the celebration, has the following members: John P. Law- ton , '24, Wallace Flower, '24, Harry C. Clark, '24, Milton Peterson, '25, Robert Hummer, '25, Franklin Dick- man, '25E, and Arden Kireshner, '24. The fathers will be housed at the fraternities, the Union, and at rooms which the committee is to secure from Ann Arbor residents for the week- end. NEW ECONOMICS HEAD WILL ADDESS SMOKR ROYAL TERRACE ORCHESTRA ,AND VARSITY QUARTETTE ALSO. ON PROGRAM Prof. Edmund Day, who has recent- ly been appointed head of the econom- ics department, will*'be the principal speaker at the all-campus economic smoker, at 7:30 o'clock Tuesday ev- ening in the Upper Reading room ,o the Union. This will be Prof. Day's first public task. His subject will be "Business as a Profession". The entertainment for the evening will cnnsist ofs evera1 slections bv ,k HARVEY ON NOTE ' English' Earl Presents Graceful Reply To Amibassador's Ob. jeetions U[ES TACT IN DECLARING MATTER SOULD BE DROPPED London, March 9-(By A.P.)-The Earl of Balfour yesterday delivered his reply to the strictures Ambassador Harvey passed on his famous note to the former Allies on the subject of inter-allied debts. Lord Balfour spoke in the calm and almost unmoved at- mosphere customary in the House of Lords. Speaks Tactfully Lord Balfour took unusual care in, the explanation, fortifying himself with copious notes and thus signal- izing his recognition of the delicacy of the task.:Ie dealt gracefully- andtact- fully with the subject, to leave no H rankling behind. . Saying that when the note was or- iginally prepared it .was dealing with} "the most difficult, the most danger- ous and the most anxious question ofj international ifldebtedness," lie quoted the passage Ambassador Harvey ob- 1jected to as follows: "Thie United States insisted, in sub- stance, if not in form, that though oui allies were to spend the money it was only on our security that they wer; prepared to lend it." Seeks to Correct Error Lord Balfour opened his remarks with an expression of the belief that I considering momentous changes since his note was penned, it would have been preferable to allow the matter to rest, but he thought the House would agree that when a person in the high position of Ambassador Harvey publicly expressed the desire that the present British government should formally and explicitly remove misap-- prehension, silence on his part would lead to a misunderstanding.I New York, March 9-(By A.P.)- Oscar T. Crosby, assistant Secretary of the Treasury during the war, char- ; acterized today as "misapprehension" the assertion of Lord Balfour yester- lay in the House of Lords that the United States had demanded a Brit- ish guarantee before financing the other Allies.I PARONS SELECTED FOR 1925 SOPHOMORE POM Patrons and patronesses for the Sophomore ,Prom, which is to be held March 23 at the Union, have been nam- ed. Arrangements for dance pro- grams in class colors, maroon and white, for the luncheon and for the music have also been made. The patrons and patronesses are: President Marion L. Burtonand Mrs. Burton, Dean Joseph A. Bursley and Mrs. Bursley, Dean John R. Effinger and Mrs. Effinger, Dean Henry M.' Bates and Mrs. Bates, Dean William R. Humphreys and Mrs. Humphreys, - Dean Jean Hamilton, Coach Fielding H. Yost and Mrs. Yost, Coach George - E. Little and Mrs. Little, Prof. Robert M. Wenley and Mrs. Wenley, Prof. Charles B. Vibbert and Mrs. Vibbert, Prof. George W. Patterson and Mrs. Patterson, Prof. Peter Field and Mrs. Field, Prof. Emil Lorch and Mrs. t 7 2{ I F , w ' # ' 4 i t r 'G C s i I _ I i 3 i } f M .THREE RECORDS CRASH WHEN TALE MEETS PENN New Hlaven, Conn., March 9- (By A.P.)-Two world's records and one intercollegiate record were b~roken here tonight by thej Yale swimming team in a meets jwith Pennsylvania, which Yale won. 45 to 9. In the 250 yard relay the Blue five man team established a new I orld 's record, swimming the distance in 2 minutes-4 secondsI their own previous record being 2 minutes 4 3-5 seconds. A second world's record was broken when the Yale six man team swam the 300 yard relay in 2 minutes 30 3-5 seconds, break- ing their own record of 2 min- utes, 31 2-5 seconds. Eddie Bench of Yale made a new intercollegiate record in the 200 yard breast stroke swimming the distance in 2 minutes, 57 2-5 seconds. PRICE FIVE CENTS BOARD1 TO ACT O "NAME IT YOST" PETITIONS TODAY M OVE IVENT IN ITIA TED BY ST IU. DENT COUNCIL UNIVERSALLY. PRAISED ALUMNI AND FACULTY MEMBERS ENDORSE PLAN Letters Of. Approval Received From Ferris, Groesbeck, White and Day Action on the part of the Board in Control of Athletics to name the new field house after Coach Fielding H. Yost will be taken today. A commit- tee from the Student council will pre- sent its petition for the dedication of the new plant before the board which meets at 12:30 o'clock this afternoon The petition may be acted upon by the board immediately or plaed on the table for further discussion. The presentation of the petition follows the receipt of hundreds of petitions that have been submitted by students, faculty members, and alum- ni throughout the country to the council asking that the new home of Michigan athletics be named after the "Old Man". Detroit Responds Practically every active alumni as- sociation in the country has passed resolutions or its members set i dividual recommendationss favbring the suggestion. This includes .:the larger alumni organizations of .New York, Chicago, Detroit and as- far west as Seattle and -Portland, and all of the smaller bodies as well. The first action taken by alumni was by the Detroit group on Jan..24, just five days after the campaign had been inaugurated by the Student council and petitions circulated. The Detroit alumni resolution gives as its reasons why the field house should be named after Yost the following main points: "That Coach Yost is the most prom- inent figure connectsi 4 /itlic l, giatte athletics in the United States today; that his followers have long sought for a means of showing their appre- ciation of his varied services; and that it was due to his efforts: that the new field house was conceived -and- is being built." Prominent Alumni Approve Other alumni organizations passed resolutions more or less a-long this same line all praising Yost as the Oe logical choice for the honor. Many letters have been received from men well known in public affairs all en- dorsing the same opinion. Some of these were from William R. Day, '70, former justice of the United States Supreme court, Senator Woodbridge N. Ferris, Regent Junius E. Beal, '82, Regent James O. Murfin, '95, 'Gov. Alexander J. Gtoesbeck, '93, and Steward Edward White, '95. A recent letter from E. J; Ottaway, '94, president of the Port Huron times Herald, expresses, in the eyes of the council, the representative attitude of the great majority of thousands of Michigan men and women, undergrad- nates and alumni. The letter reads as follows: "I have let my mind run over the years of athletic history since my day at the University and I cannot thi-k of any name that means so much In athletics rs the name of Yost, n t only for athletics in general but for a very high type of athletic standard, personally among the ' students he trains and generally in - connection with the University athletic program. I have tried to think of some of the outstanding athletic stars whose name might be used. I can think of sev- eral whose names have meant very, much in Michigan athletic history and whose achievements since leaving the University, in peace and war, :;have led us to think more and more of them as the years have gone by, and yet in spite of this, my conviction is that the nanie of Yost should take precedence of all others." ALPHA NU DEBATES 0-N WORLD COURT PLANS OF PRESIDENTU Alpha Nu debating society held its regular weekly debate last night in the club rooms in University hall. The subject was "Resolved..that the Unit- ed States should eater the World Court as proposed by President Hard- ing". Plans were discussed for a. closed meeting on March 16, at -which time the freshmen members of the society will present the negative side of the question "Resolved, that the presiden- jout the diffcul ties createa tar the 1)1 ish au,,thorities in the Rhineland. I 1 1 Maier And Paltison Charmr ota Troops to ty In Nsovef Two-Piano Concert D ,March France will not release her present - .hold on the Ruhr. This was the reply of Gen. Degoutte, the French come- By Edgar I. Ades - Harold Bauer's arrangement of the mand', mlade in atstatementh to til A decidedly entertaining addition to Bach Fantasie and Fugue in A minor newspaper men in answer to Chan-- the novelties of the current musical which opened the program conserva- cellor Cno's address before the Reich seasn w~ th reita xvih a senis he a-sstag ?Monday. season was the two-piano recital with tively, as seems the fashion, was German resistance, Gen. Degoutte which Guy Maier and Lee Pattison played with a nobility which imme- declared, had only fortified France in nade their local debut and concluded 1 diately dispelled all doubts as to thel her struggle in the Ruhr, and he pre- the Choral Union concert series la-st us.dicted that soon the French and Bel-" tmusical insight of the pianists. To us, gian economic blockade would begin night in Hill auditorium. Unique in the most beautiful feature of the con- to bear fruit. the field which they are rapidly pop- cert was the interpretation of ularizing, their art possesses the su- Franck's Prelude, Fugue and Varia- MCPEEK NOMINATED perior merit of rare musical distinc- tion, which followed. This is music 'TO BENCH A tion--a fact which was recognized by to live with and at each hearing to , a.n audience generous in appreciation derive some hitherto unrealized de- and applause. I light. Its rich melodic beauty, lofty Word has been received here of the At once the most obvious and the style and strong reposefulness were nomination of Roy McPeek, '00 of most penetrating comment upon the disclosed with entrancing effect. In Charlotte, as circuit judge, to succeed pianism of Me,,--rs. Maier and Pattison Saint-Saenas graceful Scherzo, Op. ; Judge Clement Smith, deceased. Mc- is that it represents the acme of per- 87 and his Variations on a theme by Peek carried the Republican vote by fection- in ensemble playing. Both Beethoven more spectacular qualities an overwhelming majority, and as men are artists of high rank whose were exploited-a dazzling technique, there is no Democrat nominee oppos- long and dili&nt practice together has admirable rhythmic sense and fascin- ing him, h-is election is assured. so effectively blended their individual ating elan, With the death of Judge Smith con- virtues that their two pianos speak as Alfredo Casella's "Pupazetti" suite, ing just before the primary election one. Every measure of their per- though ultra-modern, is not an at- the serving of the reiainder of his formance was imbued with zestful vi- tack upon the ears, but it 'was an at- term falls to MePeek. after which he tality, a tone of crystalline clarity, an tack upon our sense of the ludicrous will begin his own six year term. ..... , . ,,,.-.- I 1 ,i ' a a if ' ' ,< ' Do You Know that there a fe wpeople on this campus that still do not realize the extent of or the number of people reached through the Daily's Classified service? We - i i I Lorch, Prof. Evans Holbrook and Mrs. Holbrook, Prof. Louis A. Strauss and Mrs. Strauss, and Prof. Rollo E., McCotter and Mrs. McCotter.